flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Greenbuild 2012 Report: Green Architecture Firms

Greenbuild 2012 Report: Green Architecture Firms

Design firms deliver gold, platinum, even net-zero projects


By By Robert Cassidy | November 1, 2012
Georgia Techs Engineered Biosystems Building will provide 200,000 sf of researc
Georgia Techs Engineered Biosystems Building will provide 200,000 sf of research space for multidisciplinary biomedical researc
This article first appeared in the November 2012 issue of BD+C.

Architecture firms are pursuing transparency and disclosure en route to achieving high sustainability ratings for their clients’ buildings.

“Transparency and healthy materials is one of the hottest topics in the green building industry,” says SERA Architecture’s Lisa Petterson, AIA, LC, LEED AP BD+C. “We are seeing more and more emphasis on actual rather than predicted performance.”

With partners Lucid and Enmetric, SERA is studying plug load use in its own Portland, Ore., office, to see how to save energy. A previous research project on water savings in actual projects led to regulatory changes in Oregon.

VOA Associates is developing post-occupancy surveys to collect building performance data. “This will help us understand human interaction on specific buildings and building types, to inform future projects and help us create better, healthier built environments,” says VOA Sustainability Leader Susan Heinking, AIA, NCARB, LEED AP O+M.

To get a better handle on real performance numbers, HDR Architecture has developed two metrics: the Sustainable Return on Investment (SROI), which computes a dollar-based measure of project goals in reducing energy, water, and waste; and the Sustainability-adjusted Life Cycle Cost Analysis (SLCCA), which evaluates the full cost of design decisions so that benchmarks can be developed for sustainable design decisions.

As a firm that does work all over the world, Gensler has to be attuned to many different climates; hence its use of design performance analysis software at the beginning of virtually all projects, says Kirsten Ritchie, PE, LEED AP O+M, the firm’s Sustainable Design Director. “We develop early conceptual designs and use building simulation software to measure design impacts on energy, carbon, water, and daylight,” she says. “This enables us to make design decisions that ‘tune’ our building performance.”

Firms are finding, however, that energy modeling, while usually helpful, is not an end in itself. “It narrows the universe of options really quickly and helps us make the right moves as early [in design] as possible,” says Heather Holdridge, Assoc. AIA, EIT, LEED AP BD+C, Sustainability Coordinator with Lake|Flato Architects. “It helps us to set some clear goals early in the process.”

At Cannon Design, project teams have a proprietary design tool at their fingertips—it’s called Material LIFE—that enables them to compare construction systems and materials from cradle to gate. According to Sustainability Director Rand Ekman, AIA, LEED Fellow, this process allows designers to choose materials that not only reduce global energy use but also have a positive life cycle impact.

MINING FOR PRECIOUS GOLD—AND MORE

More and more architecture firms are pushing higher and higher on the sustainability ladder.

For example, PGAL has executed numerous high-LEED projects in recent years: the net-zero-ready Bachelor Enlisted Quarters at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center, Twentynine Palms, Calif., awaiting Platinum certification; Gold-certified Innovation Village Apartments at Florida Atlantic University; the $42 million U.S. Federal Courthouse, Fort Pierce, Fla., awaiting Gold certification; and two transport projects seeking LEED Gold—the Consolidated Rental Car Facility at Boston’s Logan International Airport and the Regional Intermodal Transit Center at Bob Hope Airport, Burbank, Calif.

Globetrotting firm RTKL recently earned LEED Gold for the Mirdif City Centre, a 230,000-sf mall with parking for 7,000 cars, in Dubai. Another LEED project, the 135,000-sf Mall of Egypt, in Cairo, was also completed for client Majid Al Futtaim Properties. Closer to home, RTKL gained LEED Gold for the 21,000-sf White Oak Wonders, a child care center on the campus of the Food and Drug Administration headquarters in White Oak, Md.

WD Partners, a leader in green retail design, emphasizes the ongoing investment value of sustainability to clients like grocers Whole Foods, Price Chopper, and Fresh & Easy. The firm collaborated with UTC Power on the installation of a 400-kW fuel cell at a Stop & Shop in East Torrington, Conn., that provides 95% of the store’s electrical needs; the store’s total utility bills have been trimmed in half in the last two years.

WD Partners has also contracted with the U.S. Energy Department’s Pacific Northwest National Lab to develop the next-generation Home Depot retail outlet—one that will cut energy use 50%.

Design firms are also widening their green service capabilities. Atkins has launched a retro-commissioning business, based in Fort Myers, Fla., to capture some of the potential $1.8 billion that Pike Research projects will propel the retro-Cx market by 2014.

Firms are also stretching their goals. Net-zero energy is no longer the impossible dream, as the Health Professions & Student Services Building at North Shore Community College, Danvers, Mass., demonstrates

The three-story, LEED Gold building uses a 50-well geothermal system, chilled beams, and a tight building envelope to reduce energy consumption, and roof-mounted PVs to generate the power needed to make the building net-zero for energy. DiMella Shaffer Associates (designer) and Walsh Brothers (CM) headed the team.

On the green horizon: PNC Bank Headquarters, under design by Gensler and Buro Happold (SE, MEP, modeling consultant). The client for this $400 million, 800,000-sf tower, PNC’s Gary Saulson, has publicly defined his “modest” demands—to make it the “greenest high-rise building in the world,” with the lowest predicted energy use intensity. We’ll find out how well the Building Team did to meet these goals in about three years. +

Related Stories

| Nov 2, 2010

Yudelson: ‘If It Doesn’t Perform, It Can’t Be Green’

Jerry Yudelson, prolific author and veteran green building expert, challenges Building Teams to think big when it comes to controlling energy use and reducing carbon emissions in buildings.

| Nov 2, 2010

Historic changes to commercial building energy codes drive energy efficiency, emissions reductions

Revisions to the commercial section of the 2012 International Energy Conservation Code (IECC)  represent the largest single-step efficiency increase in the history of the national, model energy. The changes mean that new and renovated buildings constructed in jurisdictions that follow the 2012 IECC will use 30% less energy than those built to current standards.

| Nov 1, 2010

Sustainable, mixed-income housing to revitalize community

The $41 million Arlington Grove mixed-use development in St. Louis is viewed as a major step in revitalizing the community. Developed by McCormack Baron Salazar with KAI Design & Build (architect, MEP, GC), the project will add 112 new and renovated mixed-income rental units (market rate, low-income, and public housing) totaling 162,000 sf, plus 5,000 sf of commercial/retail space.

| Nov 1, 2010

John Pearce: First thing I tell designers: Do your homework!

John Pearce, FAIA, University Architect at Duke University, Durham, N.C., tells BD+C’s Robert Cassidy  about the school’s construction plans and sustainability efforts, how to land work at Duke, and why he’s proceeding with caution when it comes to BIM.

| Nov 1, 2010

Vancouver’s former Olympic Village shoots for Gold

The first tenants of the Millennium Water development in Vancouver, B.C., were Olympic athletes competing in the 2010 Winter Games. Now the former Olympic Village, located on a 17-acre brownfield site, is being transformed into a residential neighborhood targeting LEED ND Gold. The buildings are expected to consume 30-70% less energy than comparable structures.

| Oct 27, 2010

Grid-neutral education complex to serve students, community

MVE Institutional designed the Downtown Educational Complex in Oakland, Calif., to serve as an educational facility, community center, and grid-neutral green building. The 123,000-sf complex, now under construction on a 5.5-acre site in the city’s Lake Merritt neighborhood, will be built in two phases, the first expected to be completed in spring 2012 and the second in fall 2014.

| Oct 21, 2010

GSA confirms new LEED Gold requirement

The General Services Administration has increased its sustainability requirements and now mandates LEED Gold for its projects.

| Oct 18, 2010

World’s first zero-carbon city on track in Abu Dhabi

Masdar City, the world’s only zero-carbon city, is on track to be built in Abu Dhabi, with completion expected as early as 2020. Foster + Partners developed the $22 billion city’s master plan, with Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture, Aedas, and Lava Architects designing buildings for the project’s first phase, which is on track to be ready for occupancy by 2015.

| Oct 13, 2010

Editorial

The AEC industry shares a widespread obsession with the new. New is fresh. New is youthful. New is cool. But “old” or “slightly used” can be financially profitable and professionally rewarding, too.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021